Where Can I Find Vickie Baker Southern Girl Song

"Come To Mama"

Vickie Bakery (New Unmarried Alert!)

Composed by Willie Mitchell


May one, 2020:

Originally posted in Daddy B. Squeamish's Top 10 "Breaking" Singles, May 2020.

Daddy B. Nice'due south Top ten "BREAKING" Southern Soul Singles For. . .

-------MAY 2020-------

….2. "Talk In Your Sleep"----Vickie Baker

Vickie Baker harks back to the flickering dawn of contemporary southern soul, recording with Shreveport's legendary Suzie Q maven Stan Lewis at Paula Records. Somewhat inactive in recent years, Vickie scored a solid but mostly disregarded single called "Honey Pigsty" (#ii Single/Feb 17). "Talk In Your Slumber" is fifty-fifty ameliorate, and you lot'll dearest the way Vickie leads into her bluster, real subtle-similar... Beware, fellas! From Unkle Phunk's Juke Joint Vol. ane.

Heed to Vickie Bakery singing ""Talk In Your Sleep" on YouTube.

**************************

Originally posted in Daddy B. Nice's CD Review of Unkle Phunk's Juke Joint Vol. one, May one, 2020.

Vickie Baker'southward outing, "Talk In Your Sleep", is a revelation, a hit from the first fourth dimension yous hear information technology. With the usual genre modifications, this tune could make it on the Country charts. Impeccably produced (apologies to Unkle Phunk but I'yard going to get out on a limb and judge the producer is Mike Darden), it's hard to believe it's not a cover of a standard by someone like the Pointer Sisters. Of class, it's not "country" in Vickie's telling, with the swirling organ background punctuated with brass-section flourishes. Information technology's blackness as night, the soulfulness delivered in baking beginning and concluding vocalism-overs.

SouthernSoulRnB.com - Chitlin' Circuit Southern Soul Music Guide

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For the latest updates on Vickie Baker, scroll downwardly to the "Tidbits" department. To automatically link to Vickie Baker's charted radio singles, awards, CD'southward and other citations on the website, go to "Baker, Vickie" in Daddy B. Nice'due south Comprehensive Index.

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Daddy B. Nice's Original Critique:

Vickie Baker is one of the pluckiest of the younger generation of Southern Soul artists. Consider this hilarious exchange from her collaboration with Bobby Rush on "I Don't Want You To Go out Your Wife."

(Knock, knock, knock.
Knock, knock, knock.)

Baker (in irritated voice): "Who's that knocking on my door this time in the morning?"

Rush: "Bobby Rush."

"Bobby Rush!"

"Yeah, aye."

"Whatcha' desire?"

"What exercise ya mean, what I want?"

"Whatcha' doin' hither?" Baker demands.

"I'g. . . I'm . . ." Rush is stammering desperately by now. "I want to motility in. My wife put me out."

"And?" Bakery asks pointedly.

"And I thought, well. . . we've been dealin' and all."

"Now yous know y'all can't come in hither and endeavor and move in with me," Baker says. "You but tin't do that."

You lot can just encounter the hangdog expression on poor Bobby Rush's face. It's a perfect snapshot of 1 of those moments we men call "existent bummers": another blow by the gentler sexual practice to our psychological vitals. And Vickie Baker's ability to convey easy-going street wisdom is what makes it so convincing.

In "Come To Mama," a craftily arranged cover of the archetype by Ann Peebles' (likewise covered by Etta James and Koko Taylor), Vickie carries the day with an assured but seemingly effortless vocal that rides a jaunty jazz piano and a daringly original arrangement showcased past a to-die-for horn chorus.

"Come up To Mama" pushes Southern Soul closer to jazz than just most annihilation yet recorded. The production, the sly, knowing affection Baker has for the fabric, and the Peebles mystique lurking in the background brand the cut one of the more than unique recordings by a immature female person artist in recent memory.

Many fans consider Baker's signature hit to be the tender ballad, Expert Loving, from the album of the aforementioned name (Wing, 2000). Non to exist confused with the Rascal's frenetic rock and curl hit, Baker'southward "Good Loving" is all about cuddling up to a loved one with no agenda simply unselfish and unhurried dearest.

"Early on in the morning
When information technology's cold outside,
I'll be the pillow yous lay your caput on.
I'll be the blanket to go along yous warm."

You can't go much simpler than that. The melody, though bare, is a thing of beauty, sticking in the mind long after hearing. Along with the unique and more upbeat "Come To Mama," the two songs bookend a promising career in the making.

--Daddy B. Overnice

About Vickie Bakery (New Single Alert!)

Vickie Baker was built-in on October three, 1961 in Shreveport, Louisiana, the daughter of a gospel vocalist, L.B. Baker. Past (solar day-job) profession a school teacher in Vicksburg, Mississippi, Vickie Baker is a self-described North Louisiana state girl who broke into the Southern Soul scene touring with Ernie Johnson and Willie Clayton in the 90's.

Her debut CD, Don't Gimme No Lip (Paula, 1997), featured a title rails co-written past ubiquitous R&B producer John Ward. The disc was uneven from a Southern Soul perspective, reaching out to perhaps also many sources (the urban funk of "Freak On The Side," for example), but it displayed the skills of a promising and eclectic new R&B artist.

Baker'southward follow-upwards LP, Good Loving, was issued in 2000 and did not disappoint. The title track, co-equanimous by Baker'due south horn specialist from the previous album, Stephen E. Hall, Sr., honed the Vickie Bakery persona and solidified her niche as an up and coming Southern Soul songstress.

Baker has continued to record well regarded but hard-to-find music up to the present day, including her duet with Bobby Blitz, "Don't Leave Your Wife," and the upbeat and idiosyncratic "Come To Mama."

2 new radio singles from an upcoming CD began to broadcast across the Stations of the Deep South early in the summer of 2005. "He Say, She Say (I'yard Gonna Stand Past My Man)" and "Tussy Gyre," which on record sounds like "Tootsie Roll," certainly one of the more graphic metaphors in recent retentiveness. The songs were notable for a grittier sexuality than anything Baker had previously recorded, and signaled that more potent material was on the way. The songs quickly entered chitlin' circuit rotations for mutually lengthy stays.

(Roll down to Tidbit's #iii for Vickie Baker's discography.)

Song's Transcendent Moment

"If y'all need a satisfier,
Let me be your pacifier...
Come to Mama.
Come abode to Mama."

Tidbits

1. (Updated July 2, 2016)

Vickie Baker on YouTube:

Mind to Vickie Baker singing "Don't Gimme No Lip" on YouTube.

Listen to Vickie Bakery singing "Go Me Weak" on YouTube.

Listen to Vicki Bakery singing "Honey Strike" on YouTube.

Listen to Vickie Bakery singing "No Hurting, No Gain" and other songs live onstage on YouTube.

Listen to Vickie Baker singing "Down Abode Blues" live onstage on YouTube.

Listen to Vickie Baker singing "Tussy Scroll" on YouTube.

Listen to Vicki Baker singing "He Say She Say" on YouTube.

Listen to Vickie Bakery singing "Right Thang Wrong Human" on YouTube.

Heed to Vickie Baker singing "I Could Show You" on YouTube.

ii.

Baronial 19, 2007.

Your Daddy B. Nice has finally scored some new data on the scantily-distributed production of Vickie Bakery. Long one of my favorite songs, "Don't Get out Your Wife," Vickie's amusing duet with Southern Soul's Joker, Bobby Rush, is now listed on the Chittlin' Circuit website as a rails on a CD entitled Love Strike (link here). Baker fans can request the song and hear it in its entirety on that site. "Come To Mama," the Baker cover of the picayune-known Ann Peebles archetype and Daddy B. Squeamish's number-one-rated track for Bakery, is also listed as coming from the Love Strike CD.

Meanwhile, a new album by Bakery has appeared in mid-2007. I Could Show Yous (Falife Productions) includes the song "Tussy Roll" (I'll aways think of it as "Tootsie Roll" and that'due south the way it's sung) that I first started hearing on Southern Soul radio in 2005 (read more below). The album too contains Vickie'due south cover of Bobby Blitz's "I'm Tired Of That Who Said Mess" entitled "He Say She Say." And bank check out the fine R&B groove Vickie manufactures with a more than-than-capable vocal on "Brand Me Weak." Information technology's good to meet some Vickie Baker textile percolating into the light of day.

--Daddy B. Squeamish

3.


July 3, 2016:

Vickie Baker "Refreshed"

Listen to Vickie Baker singing "Sneaking And Cheating" on YouTube.

"SNEAKING AND Cheating"……A NEW Song written and produced by Ricky White and published in White's new compilation,

RICKY WHITE PRESENTS: COMBINATION 3

Daddy B. Nice notes:

So many of the early on (turn-of-the-century) artists of contemporary southern soul have fallen by the wayside....

....Robert "The Duke" Tillman, Picayune Kim Stewart, Sorrento Ussery, An-Jay, LaKeisha, Jody Sticker and not least, Vickie Baker. Like her mostly forgotten peers, Vickie has connected to perform--although rarely. She has produced no new albums since 2007's I COULD SHOW YOU. Her discography remains gear up at 4 albums as follows:

Don't Gimmie No Lip (Paula 1997)

Sample/Buy Vickie Bakery'southward DON'T GIMME NO LIP CD.

Master writers/producers: Ben Shaw, John Ward, Fred Hall, Frank-O Johnson

Good Loving (Then Fly 2000)

Out of Print (Label was started by Vickie Bakery and Stephen Hall)

Buy used copies of Vickie Baker's Proficient LOVING CD at Amazon.

Love Strike (So Wing 2003)

(Out of Impress)

Primary writers/producers: Rue Davis

Buy used copies of Vickie Baker'south Dearest STRIKE CD at Amazon.

I Could Show You (FaLife Prod 2007)

Primary writers/producers:Luster Baker

Sample/Buy Vickie Bakery's I COULD Testify You lot CD at CD Baby.

It's impossible to convey to people in 2016, with the Net in the palm of their easily and every conceivable factoid bachelor, how empty and night the same system was in the early years, when these artists actually were total unknowns. Many of the discography details about Vickie Bakery to a higher place have merely come up to low-cal every bit the years have passed. In addition to the influence of Harrison Calloway on her first album (about which more than in a minute), Rue Davis, Frank-O Johnson and John Ward were contributors or collaborators on Bakery albums.

Perhaps about interestingly, in retrospect, is the significance of Luster Baker, Vickie's brother, on her 2007 release, I COULD SHOW Y'all. (He wrote and produced.) At the time he was an unknown. At present Luster is an established southern soul artist, with hot singles "That's My Boo," "Dump Truck," and "My Main Thang," who works and tours as equals with the likes of T.M. Soul and 50.J. Echols.

Vickie talks about the influence of the recently-passed Harrison Calloway in a terrific interview in the "Jefferson Blues Mag". In the interview, Vickie besides describes her blood brother Luster as the "musical genius" of the family unit. Mike Stephenson elicits all yous ever wanted to know well-nigh Vickie Bakery.

Your Daddy B. Nice was specially satisfied with Vickie's explanation of starting out with Paula Records and Stan Lewis (who afterward started Suzie Q) in Shreveport, the terminal place anyone would desire to visit simply (maybe) because of that the real birthplace of gimmicky southern soul (Maurice Wynn, O.B. Buchana, David Brinston, Donnie Ray). Only in a place so bypassed by the headwinds of national media could a blossom like southern soul survive. Shreveport, of course, was Vickie Bakery's hometown.

A few obscurities persist. "Don't Leave Your Wife," Vickie's comedic duet with Bobby Blitz--the principal premise of my artist profile written approximately a dozen years ago (beneath)--can't be confirmed by readers either through retail outlets or YouTube. And "Come To Mama," your Daddy B. Nice's signature single, is also still in limbo, a victim of Vickie's out-of-print, self-published albums. I'd suggest Vickie at least post them on YouTube for the benefit of fans if non re-pressing them for retail. These are cardinal elements in contemporary southern soul'southward unfolding history--particularly the duet with Bobby Blitz.

In the meantime, Vickie Baker is popping up every in one case in awhile on Daddy B. Nice's Concert Calendar, and her new single, "Sneaking And Cheating" (released on Ricky White's new COMBINATION 3 collection--come across in a higher place) is a positive sign the multi-talented Ms. Baker is not done with southern soul music.


Read the Mike Stephenson interview of Vickie Baker in "Jefferson Blues Magazine".

SouthernSoulRnB.com - Chitlin' Circuit Southern Soul Music Guide

If You Liked. . . You'll Love

If you liked Dionne Warwick'due south "Walk On By," you lot should love Vickie Baker'southward "Come Home To Mama."

Honorary "B" Side

"Good Loving"

Sample or Purchase
Honey Strike.

Sample or Buy
Love Strike.

westhavess.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.southernsoulrnb.com/artistguide.cfm?aid=76

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